Sterling Grove
Two distinct insurance policies stapled into one cheap permanent. The shroud blanket protects your other enchantments from Disenchant, from targeted removal, from theft, which is the half that makes it a foundation piece for any deck that turns enchantments into a win condition rather than incidental value. The sacrifice ability is the safety valve: when the protected piece dies anyway, or when you simply need an enchantment the board does not yet hold, you tutor for one and stack it as your next draw. The two halves answer different threats (the blanket guards against interaction, the tutor guards against drawing the wrong half of a combo), and together they make an enchantment-based engine far harder to disrupt than its individual parts suggest. The tension lives in the price: the search lands the card a turn away rather than in hand, so you trade tempo for selection, and you have to give up the shroud-granting body to do it, choosing between protection and finding the next piece. That trade is the design's whole point. Set against Enlightened Tutor, which simply finds, this one also defends; that double duty is why enchantment-centric strategies have leaned on it for decades as the connective tissue holding the deck's fragile pieces together.





